Book Snobbishness: “Using your personal taste or literary standards to dictate to other people what they should spend their time or money on. It's not just about looking down on someone for reading romance or science fiction (though that's part of it, of course), but also about shaming readers for where they spend money or the format in which they read.” Amanda Nelson, managing editor of Book Riot, sits down with 0s&1s to talk about gender, books and blogging. To get your fill of literary blogging, check out our list of must-read literary Tumblrs.

One thing that pretty much everyone can agree on is that Go Set a Watchman is a controversial book. Our own Michael Bournesaid it “fails as a work of art in every way except as a corrective to the standard sentimental reading of Atticus Finch.” At Slate, Dan Kois, Meghan O’Rourke and Katy Waldmandebate the main questions the novel raised.

What happens when two magazine writers publish stories on the same topic within a month of each other? We get to read some of the best long-form journalism of the year. Both Esquire's Chris Jones and The Washingtonian's Garrett M. Graff wrote about what it was like to be on Air Force One after the Kennedy assassination. Jones' "The Flight From Dallas" hits 7,600 words, but Graff's "Angel is Airborne" totals 18,000. Save some time to read both because they're equally gripping and uniquely told narratives.

RIP Robert Stone, who passed away at his home in Key West on Saturday. The author, who won the National Book Award in 1975 for his novel Dog Soldiers, was 77. You can get a sense of his work by reading Tatjana Soli’sreview of his story collection Fun with Problems.